Eye Conditions
What eye prescription is legally blind in the UK?

'Legally blind' is not a UK legal term, but the phrase is often used to mean **severely sight impaired (SSI)** — the modern equivalent of 'blind' on the UK's Certificate of Vision Impairment (CVI). This guide explains what actually counts, why your glasses prescription alone does not determine it, and what registration means in practice.
The legal definitions
In the UK, sight impairment is defined by visual acuity and visual field, measured in the **better eye with the best possible correction** (glasses or contact lenses on). The two categories are:
- **Severely sight impaired (blind)** — visual acuity worse than 3/60, OR 3/60 to 6/60 with a very contracted visual field, OR 6/60 or better with a very contracted field.
- **Sight impaired (partially sighted)** — visual acuity of 3/60 to 6/60 with a full field, OR 6/24 with a moderately contracted field, OR 6/18 or better with a marked field defect.
Snellen 6/60 means you can see at 6 metres what a normally sighted person sees at 60 metres. Registration is voluntary and is completed by a consultant ophthalmologist on the CVI form.
Why your glasses prescription is not the answer
Patients often ask 'what prescription counts as legally blind?' — but a spectacle prescription (e.g. −8.00 dioptres) describes the refractive error, not the vision. Someone with a very high prescription who sees 6/6 with glasses on is **not** sight impaired. Registration depends on the acuity you achieve with your best correction, not the strength of the lens.
That said, patients with prescriptions above roughly −10 or +8 dioptres often have other eye complications (myopic maculopathy, retinal thinning, cataract) that can reduce best-corrected vision, and those complications are what may bring them into the sight-impaired category.
Conditions that most commonly lead to registration in the UK
The commonest UK causes of sight impairment registration are:
- **Age-related macular degeneration (AMD)** — the leading cause in adults over 60
- **Glaucoma** — permanent field loss if untreated; see our glaucoma section for detail
- **Diabetic retinopathy**
- **Cataract** — but this is reversible with cataract surgery, so it should not lead to registration unless surgery is contraindicated
- **Inherited retinal disease** (e.g. retinitis pigmentosa)
Uncorrected refractive error should never leave someone sight impaired in the UK — a proper refraction and glasses (or, where appropriate, laser eye surgery or lens replacement) should be the first step.
What registration does for you
Being certified as sight impaired or severely sight impaired gives access to:
- Low-vision aids and rehabilitation from your local sensory team
- The Blind Person's Personal Tax Allowance
- Reduced TV licence fee (50% for SSI)
- Free NHS eye tests and, in many cases, help with transport costs
- Priority for Personal Independence Payment (PIP) and other benefits assessments
- Symbol cane or long-cane training
Registration is a supportive process — it is not a driving licence flag on its own, but the DVLA vision standard is a separate legal test and must be met to keep a licence.
Driving vision standards
You must be able to read a UK number plate in good daylight from 20 metres away (with glasses or contacts if you wear them) and have a visual acuity of at least 6/12 with both eyes open. Losing this standard means you must tell the DVLA and stop driving until reassessed.
When to see a consultant
If your vision is dropping despite up-to-date glasses, or if an optometrist has raised concerns about the macula, glaucoma or diabetic changes, ask for a referral to an ophthalmologist. Early treatment prevents avoidable sight loss in most UK cases.
You can book a private consultation at my London practice or call **020 3137 3237** if you would like a specialist assessment sooner than the NHS pathway allows.
Frequently asked questions
- Am I legally blind if I can't see without my glasses?
- No. Registration depends on your best-corrected vision, not your uncorrected vision. If you see well with glasses or contacts, you are not sight impaired.
- What Snellen acuity counts as severely sight impaired in the UK?
- Broadly, worse than 3/60 with the best correction, or 3/60 to 6/60 with a significantly contracted visual field. A consultant ophthalmologist confirms it on the Certificate of Vision Impairment.
- Can cataract surgery reverse legal blindness?
- Yes, in most cases. If cataract is the sole cause of poor vision, cataract surgery restores acuity and registration is usually not required.
- Do I have to tell the DVLA if I'm registered sight impaired?
- You must tell the DVLA if you cannot meet the number-plate test at 20 metres or the visual field standard, whether or not you are registered. Registration itself is separate from the driving vision standard.
Explore more on Eye Conditions
Related reading
- My distance vision is good but I need glasses for reading — what should I do?
If your distance sight is still clear but reading is becoming a struggle, presbyopia is the most likely cause. Ms Tahmina Pearsall explains what to do next.
- Yellow eyes: causes, symptoms and treatment (UK guide)
A UK consultant guide to yellowing of the whites of the eyes (scleral icterus) — what causes it, when it is urgent, and how it is treated.
- DVLA eyesight rules for driving in the UK
A UK consultant explains the DVLA's number-plate test, visual acuity and visual field standards for cars, lorries and buses — and what to do if you don't meet them.
- Watery eyes (epiphora): UK causes, symptoms and treatment
Why do my eyes water? A consultant guide to epiphora — from blocked tear ducts and dry eye to eyelid problems and how each is treated in the UK.
Ready to discuss your options?
Book a private consultation with Ms Tahmina Pearsall, or call our secretary directly — mention this article and we'll pull up the treatment details for you.
النشرة الإخبارية
ابقَ على اطلاع بصحة عينيك
احصل على مقالات متخصصة وأخبار العيادة وتحديثات العلاج من د. تهمينا بيرسال مباشرةً إلى بريدك.
